After your head is ready to explode, you’re probably thinking, “I shouldn’t have volunteered to do this!”

Almost everybody who has coached youth basketball has had these thoughts and feelings go through their head at one time or another. Because coaching youth basketball can be quite overwhelming. Here are some ways to simplify it and make things easier for you.

But don’t worry. Take a deep breath and exhale because we’re here to help. You can learn from our successes and mistakes.

For youth basketball coaches your priorities should be:

Character development & making basketball enjoyable

Athletic development and skill-work

Defensive & offensive concepts (Motion offense and man to man defense are the best for long-term development, but that’s not the point of this article.)

Once you know what your priorities will be and what you should work on (hint, hint, look above), the first thing you should do is develop a long-term plan (two to five years) and season plan.

Here is what I would do if I were starting to coach a team whether it was 6th grade or 2nd grade.

First, what would I like them to develop and learn before they reach high school?

Athleticism

Ball Handling

Passing

Footwork

Lay Ups

Shooting

Basic Offensive Concepts

Basic Defensive Concepts

Your list may be different based on what you believe and how much time you have available.

Second, what should I focus on this year?

I split my practice between offensive skills, offense, defense and scrimmaging. It usually goes something like this:

Athletic development and offensive skills – 30 minutes

Defense – 15 minutes

Offense – 15 minutes

Scrimmage – 30 minutes

You could also look at it like this:

1/3 skills and athletic development

1/3 offense and defense (small-sided games)

1/3 scrimmaging

Now each year, it is a good idea to have a primary focus and secondary focus for each section of practice. One of the biggest reasons to focus on one or two things is the coaches and kids will see clear improvement by the end of the year. This motivates the players and makes it fun!! If you try to do everything equally, you might improve a little but it will barely be noticeable. If you focus on ball security for example (ball skills – ball handling and footwork) and dedicate 20 minutes to every practice and emphasize the concepts in games, you will certainly see improvement from day 1 to the last game. You can see it on film, show it to players and parents, and everyone feels good about the improvement that was made.

I will work on the primary focus every practice. I will work on the secondary focus every 2 to 4 practices.

Now, if you do this for 3 or 4 years with your focus shifting and progressing, that’s when you develop basketball players!

This might take you an extra 2 to 3 hours at the beginning of the year, but it will save you many more hours during the season and beyond if you decide to coach for multiple seasons.

Create a practice plan template for 2 to 4 practices. It will include your primary skills and secondary skills. You are not worried about specific drills here, just the categories of skills and concepts you want to work on. For example:

After you create a template, you can find your favorite drills and games for each section, print them out and put them in a binder. That way, you can look at your template before each practice and pick out your appropriate drills.

Now, if I only could get back all of those hours the first five years that I coached and I wasn’t doing this.

Instagram @basketballmb

FREE Shipping is available on all UPS ground shipments on orders over $50 (before tax).*
Orders under $50 (before tax) will be subject to a shipping charge of $9.99. New volume order discounts now available!